Rokin Collection
All products are expertly crafted, using premium materials, tailored to your specifications and promptly shipped
EDITORS COMMENTS
Rokin is a term that refers to the process of rock weathering and erosion, particularly in coastal areas. It involves the mechanical breakdown of rocks into smaller fragments due to exposure to wind, water, ice, or temperature fluctuations. This natural process contributes significantly to shaping landscapes and creating unique geological formations. In coastal environments, rokin often occurs through wave action and tidal forces. As waves crash against cliffs or shorelines, they exert immense pressure on the rocks, causing them to fracture and crumble. The constant pounding of waves also wears down exposed surfaces, gradually reducing their size over time. In addition to wave action, other factors like freeze-thaw cycles can accelerate rokin in certain regions. When water seeps into cracks within rocks during warmer temperatures and then freezes as it comes into contact with cooler air or ground temperatures below freezing point (0°C), it expands rapidly inside these crevices before turning back into liquid form when thawed out again - this repeated expansion causes further fragmentation of rock material. As a result of prolonged exposure to these erosive forces over thousands or even millions of years depending on location conditions such as sea levels rising falling tectonic plate movement etc., large boulders may eventually become pebbles sand grains silt particles clay minerals which are carried away by rivers streams ocean currents leaving behind an altered landscape characterized by smoother more rounded features than those found initially at site prior undergoing significant transformation primarily attributed effects mentioned above referred collectively herein known scientific community under umbrella term "rokin".